Photo StoryPublished : Mar 10, 2022Updated : May 18, 2022
An incredible variety of crabs, ranging from tiny pea crabs to massive mud crabs, inhabit the diverse habitats of India’s Konkan coast
Text and photos by: Shreeram M V
An incredible variety of crabs, ranging from tiny pea crabs to massive mud crabs, inhabit the diverse habitats of India’s Konkan coast
Crabs are hard to miss on India’s coasts. They scuttle away from under your feet as you walk on the beach. They wait on rocks by the sea, braving the waves that crash into them and live and swim in mangrove streams. They are important to local fishers and served as delicacies at local restaurants.
Originating in the early Jurassic period (200 million years ago), crabs have come a long way, evolving into various forms that occupy several ecological niches. Crabs belong to the order Brachyura. On the Konkan coast of Western India, there are numerous species, ranging in size from tiny pea crabs to massive mud crabs. Thirty species, belonging to 24 genera from 8 families, were recorded by Pradnya D Bandekar and VS Kakati around Karwar in North Karnataka in a study published in the Indian Journal of Ecology in 2020. This incredible diversity stems from the variety of habitats along the coast that different crabs have adapted to, ranging from sandy beaches to intertidal zones, mangroves, and rocks. Food preferences also play an important role in creating diversity; some crabs hunt small prey, some filter nutrients from the sand, some are herbivores, and others are parasites.
Crabs have a significant impact on mangroves. They act as nutrient recycling systems by feeding on leaves and litter. Their constant digging activity aerates the tightly packed mangrove soil. And they are an important prey base for many predators.
The health of our coastal ecosystems has a direct impact on the lives of crabs. As human activity increases along our coast, there is a greater threat to the amazing diversity of Konkan coast crabs. These threats include habitat degradation, heightened disturbance from the rise in footfall, and other human-associated threats like free-ranging stray dogs. Here are some of the crabs you’re likely to come across on a stroll along this coast.
is a professional photographer, naturalist and mentor at Darter Photography. His photography aims to tell stories about habitats, biodiversity and human interactions with nature, from across the world